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RosalieSilbermanAbella

Born in a displaced persons camp in Stuttgart, Germany on July 1, 1946, Rosie Silberman was the daughter of Jacob and Fanny Silberman. Jacob, the son of a book store owner, was born in Sienno, Poland (82 km WSW of Lublin) in 1910, while Fanny Krongold, the daughter of a wealthy roofing supply manufacturer, was born in Ostrowiec in 1917. They were married on September 3, 1939, just as the Germans began marching through Poland. Though the Germans murdered their two-year-old child, both survived the Holocaust. Rosalie’s father was liberated from Theresienstadt, while Fanny survived various camps before being liberated from Buchenwald. After being reunited—Fanny actually travelled by train to Theresienstadt when she learned her husband was alive and was detained there because of a typhoid epidemic—they made their way to Stuttgart. Jacob, who had a law degree from the famous Jagiellonian University in Cracow, was appointed by the Americans as head of legal services for residents of the displaced persons camp.

In 1950 the family was admitted into Canada, though Jacob was not allowed to practice law because he was not a citizen. He was allowed into Canada as a shepherd and underwear cutter. It was then that young Rosie decided to become a lawyer.

The family did well in Canada. Jacob was a successful insurance agent until his death in 1970, while Fanny became involved in real estate after he died. By the age of ten, Rosie became well known as a piano prodigy, winning many medals and awards and appearing regularly on television. She was one of the youngest graduates of the Royal Conservatory of Music, with a diploma in classical piano. At the same time she graduated from high school with one of the highest grade averages in the Province of Ontario.

She entered the University of Toronto and graduated from its law school in 1970. Six years later, after opening a practice in civil and criminal litigation, at the age of twenty-nine, she was appointed to the Ontario Family Court, thus becoming Canada’s first Jewish woman judge and the country’s youngest ever. She was also Canada’s first pregnant judge.

Her accomplishments have been remarkable and have made her one of the most admired and honored women in the country. While still in her twenties she was appointed a member of the Human Rights Commission of Ontario, of the Premier’s Advisory Committee on Confederation, of the Ontario Public Service Labour Relations Tribunal, and of the University of Toronto Academic Discipline Tribunal. She also wrote a ground-breaking study on Access to Legal Services by the Disabled. In 1984 she was the first woman chair of the Ontario Labour Relations Board and in 1988 she became the first woman in the British Commonwealth to become the head of a Law Reform Commission.

She was the sole Commissioner and author of the 1984 federal Royal Commission on Equality in Employment, in which she created the term and concept of ‘employment equity,’ a new and unique strategy for reducing barriers in employment faced by women, aboriginal people, non-whites and persons with disabilities, The theories of ‘equality’ and ‘discrimination’ she developed in her Report were adopted by the Supreme Court of Canada in its first decision dealing with equality rights under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms which was added to the Canadian Constitution in 1982. Her report has been implemented by the governments of Canada, New Zealand, Northern Ireland and South Africa.

In 1988 she moderated the nationally televised leaders’ debate culminating that year’s federal election campaign. She also became the Boulton Visiting Professor of Law at McGill University for four years and a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Toronto Law School for three years. In addition, she was asked by the federal government in 1992 to chair the Constitutional Conferences which were set up to deal with the crisis over the role of Quebec within Canada. In March 1992 she was elevated to the Ontario Court of Appeal. In August 2004 she was appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada, becoming the first Jewish woman to sit on the Canadian Supreme Court bench.

Rosalie Abella is author or co-author of four books and over seventy-five articles. She has delivered hundreds of lectures all over Canada as well as in Israel, the United States, Great Britain, Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, New Zealand, Australia and Northern Ireland. She is on the International Board of the Hebrew University, a member of the United States Holocaust Museum’s Committee on Conscience, and a former trustee of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada.

Justice Abella has twenty honorary degrees and was the first sitting judge elected to be a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, an organization consisting of Canada’s leading scholars. She was also the first incumbent of the James R. Bullock Visiting Chair in Canadian Studies at the Hebrew University in 1999 and was the first woman to receive the Distinguished Alumnus Award from the University of Toronto Faculty of Law. She was a judge of the 2003 Giller Awards, Canada’s most prestigious literary prize. Justice Abella was awarded the 2003 International Justice Prize of the Peter Gruber Foundation and the 2004 Walter S. Tarnopolsky Award for Human Rights by the Canadian Bar Association and the International Commission of Jurists, whose president (Canadian Section) cited her as one whose “entire life has revolved around the cause of human rights… She has shaped Canadian policy in equality rights, and…has also had a profound impact on human rights law and policy outside Canada. Her contributions to society as a lawyer, teacher, commissioner, and judge have always been shaped by her profound humanity.”

Extensively involved in judicial education, she organized the first judges’ conference in which all levels of the judiciary participated, the first national educational program for administrative tribunals, and the first national conference for Canada’s female judges.

In 1968 Rosalie married Irving Abella (b. 1940), the J. Richard Shiff Professor of Canadian Jewish Studies at York University in Toronto. They have two sons, Jacob, born in 1973, and Zachary, born in 1976. Not surprisingly, both are lawyers.

Selected Works by Rosalie Abella

Equality in Employment: A Royal Commission Report. Government of Canada. Ottawa: 1984; Justice Beyond Orwell. Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice. Montreal: 1985; “Law, Literature and Identity: Seeking Equality.” Saskatchewan Law Review (2000): 1–28; “The Judicial Role in a Democratic State.” Queen’s Law Journal (2001): 573–593.

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Just read a wonderful article in The Globe and Mail about Rosalie Abella. What an inspiring woman! I am ashamed that our country turned away so many of the Jewish people in their time of need during WW2. We will never know how many others could have contributed to this great country both then and now. Thank you for all you have done and continue to do Justice Abella!

I love this Lady! She's modern-minded and her written words show it. When I've heard her on CPAC, always impressed ! Am I the only person who feels she should speak-up against Harper? I feel it would be helpful for 'this Community' to assure Justice Abella that our support and moral-intuition stand with "our Ladies"!? I do not normally ask for someone else to be my 'voice' but I feel deep in my heart you also share my extreme gratitude that this jurist is ? I am kinda feeling a little vulnerable, posting here, but we are Canadians and coming together, like this, is maybe afterall what accommodating differences is all about? Ask her to speak-up against Harper's smear-campaign against Chief Justice on My behalf...through you! In other words You request for me. The PR you get from that will be emence!

I just wanted to say that the honourable Justice is truley deserving of the "Eyshet Chayil" title that is recited in households every Shabbat! the woman is a true mensch! Our Community had the privaledge of listening to her on Monday night, November 2nd 2009, and her words were not only impassionate, sincer and moving but also thought provking! Thank you Justice Silberman for touch the heart of this young Jew! Yesher Koecha, and keep up all the good work you do for Canada and our people!